Destructo-Pony. Or, "Hoof Boot Crash Test Dummy" |
- fly masks
- lead ropes
- tail bags
- hoof boots
In her younger years, she was extremely oral. The ends of lead ropes were her favorite victims of her chewing fetish, and the local tack shops loved me because I predictably was in to buy cheap nylon lead ropes every couple of months. When I wasn't buying lead ropes, I was buying fly masks or tail bags to replace the ones she had shredded beyond repair.
Fortunately, she eventually outgrew the chewing habit, I stopped using tail bags, and flymasks usually last at least a year+ these days.
But she is really hard on hoof boots. I pulled her last set of shoes in the fall of 2004 and started using boots. And she promptly started destroying them. I tried everything that was on the market at that time available in her size. With each boot I'd try, or boot modification/fix made, she'd find a new way to wreck it. If there was a part that moved or was somehow attached, she'd find a way to either break it or detach it.
I went for a period of time there were just about every week, I was getting a box in the mail with either a new boot or spare parts, and I tip my hat to the truly patient customer service people at, what was at the time, Sportack.
I'm not sure what it is about this pony that makes her so hard on boots. Her movement is very low to the ground... half the time, she just can't be bothered to pick her feet up if the footing is good.
Fast forward through a couple of years of Interesting Times and Expanded Vocabulary to the summer of 2007, when I first started using Renegades on her. That's five years now that I've been using them and they've withstood the most pony abuse, even through the different trial-and-error sessions of figuring out what size works best for her.
In five years, she's ripped one boot shell and broken one cable. Worn out countless boot shells and Velcro straps, yes...but that's only after 500-or-so miles of training and competing.
But even after five years, she's been a head-scratching exasperation to size, especially her front hooves. She's gone back and forth between a size 00 and 0. When freshly trimmed, her measurements were a classic size 00. But the shape of the boot didn't match her hoof quite right, so she always had a gap on the front, and I had to remain diligent in keeping her hoof constantly maintained.
So I'd try a size 0. The boot shape was perfect...but they were big on her. Not sloppy, but not ideal either. So going back and forth between sizes has been the story of my booting life with her...until recently. Y'see, I forgot to take my own advice when it came to boot sizing: Their feet grow and change.
I've gotten so used to her "tiny" feet that I've been determined to keep them that way...not taking into account that, no, she's not "getting long" but that her feet might naturally be getting larger. I've been, in essence, "over-trimming" her and doing a major no-no in trimming the hoof to fit the boot, instead of evaluating the hoof for itself and then fitting the boot to match.
So Mimi got a break from my zealous over-trimming, and after letting her grow out for a month or so, I had more of a clean slate hoof to work with. A minor trim later, I re-sized her for boots, and she's moved up almost an entire size.
Her fronts now fit into a size 0-Narrow with a Cutback on the length, and her hinds fit into a 00 with a cutback. And then we got to the fun part: the box of shiny new boots with her name (okay, mine, since that's what's on the mailbox...) on it.
And yesterday, we had some fun putting them to the test in the roundpen. Her outlook on the roundpen is a somewhat haphazard, no-holds-barred, cage-match type of game. Which usually involves bucking, spinning, sliding stops, fast starts, sudden sprints...all the things that make me cringe and wait for her to go crashing into one of the panels.
In short, things that will test whether a pair of boots will stay on or not.
And I actually got pictures. (Testing my camera to make sure it's all systems go before Tevis.)
So I love the bright orange boots. They look so good on her and they're so noticeable. The yellow looked good, but I love these even more!
Fortunately, she eventually outgrew the chewing habit, I stopped using tail bags, and flymasks usually last at least a year+ these days.
But she is really hard on hoof boots. I pulled her last set of shoes in the fall of 2004 and started using boots. And she promptly started destroying them. I tried everything that was on the market at that time available in her size. With each boot I'd try, or boot modification/fix made, she'd find a new way to wreck it. If there was a part that moved or was somehow attached, she'd find a way to either break it or detach it.
I went for a period of time there were just about every week, I was getting a box in the mail with either a new boot or spare parts, and I tip my hat to the truly patient customer service people at, what was at the time, Sportack.
I'm not sure what it is about this pony that makes her so hard on boots. Her movement is very low to the ground... half the time, she just can't be bothered to pick her feet up if the footing is good.
Fast forward through a couple of years of Interesting Times and Expanded Vocabulary to the summer of 2007, when I first started using Renegades on her. That's five years now that I've been using them and they've withstood the most pony abuse, even through the different trial-and-error sessions of figuring out what size works best for her.
In five years, she's ripped one boot shell and broken one cable. Worn out countless boot shells and Velcro straps, yes...but that's only after 500-or-so miles of training and competing.
But even after five years, she's been a head-scratching exasperation to size, especially her front hooves. She's gone back and forth between a size 00 and 0. When freshly trimmed, her measurements were a classic size 00. But the shape of the boot didn't match her hoof quite right, so she always had a gap on the front, and I had to remain diligent in keeping her hoof constantly maintained.
So I'd try a size 0. The boot shape was perfect...but they were big on her. Not sloppy, but not ideal either. So going back and forth between sizes has been the story of my booting life with her...until recently. Y'see, I forgot to take my own advice when it came to boot sizing: Their feet grow and change.
I've gotten so used to her "tiny" feet that I've been determined to keep them that way...not taking into account that, no, she's not "getting long" but that her feet might naturally be getting larger. I've been, in essence, "over-trimming" her and doing a major no-no in trimming the hoof to fit the boot, instead of evaluating the hoof for itself and then fitting the boot to match.
So Mimi got a break from my zealous over-trimming, and after letting her grow out for a month or so, I had more of a clean slate hoof to work with. A minor trim later, I re-sized her for boots, and she's moved up almost an entire size.
Her fronts now fit into a size 0-Narrow with a Cutback on the length, and her hinds fit into a 00 with a cutback. And then we got to the fun part: the box of shiny new boots with her name (okay, mine, since that's what's on the mailbox...) on it.
Every girl loves to get new |
In short, things that will test whether a pair of boots will stay on or not.
And I actually got pictures. (Testing my camera to make sure it's all systems go before Tevis.)
She starts off all slow and innocuous. |
Pausing to show off just how pretty she is. Once a show pony... |
THIS happens. Something made noise next door and that was all it took to set her off. |
All four off the ground! |
And go some more. Her roundpen canter is fast, and usually involves one of her shotgun, drop-and-dig gymkhana starts. |
With all of her sliding stops, spins, and crowhops, I was kind of glad not to be on her back. Really, she's 19... |
She really likes her boots. I get the best movement out of her when has them on. She's capable of going bare, but at this point, she still prefers her boots. We're working on it. |
Pony + Mare 'tude |
And the best part was that after her workout, her boots hadn't budged. The pic of her displaying her new boots in the barn aisle was actually taken after her workout, and they hadn't shifted or re-adjusted at all, which is a really good sign that I've got the fit down and they didn't shuffle to a "better fitting" position.
The roundpen is a good start for testing, but now I can't wait to get out on trail and really see how they do!
So today's take-away lesson? Horse's hooves can change, even ones that have been barefoot for a while. Periodically check and reassess boot fit and sizing.
Oh, yeah, and I love my Renegades.
So does my pony.
I love the orange boots! I currently am using shoes on my riding horse, but tonight I -discovered my mare with the hoof troubles (keratoma-surgery-hoof crack) had pulled off her eggbar shoe.
ReplyDeleteLuckily she can fit into Dazzby's Renegades so she is currently wearing a bright orange hoof boot. She's black, so its a great color combo!
The orange looks fabulous with black horses! Well, I'm biased and tend to think they look good on any color :) but they're particularly striking on blacks and greys!
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